Cursive Sekuh 15 is a bold, narrow, high contrast, upright, short x-height font.
Keywords: branding, packaging, posters, social media, invitations, friendly, playful, casual, handmade, warm, human feel, approachability, expressive display, modern casual, hand-lettered, brushy, rounded, bouncy, monoline-ish, textured.
This font has a hand-drawn, brush-pen look with rounded terminals, softly irregular contours, and a lively baseline rhythm. Strokes are generally thick with occasional thinning through curves, giving a natural marker/brush pressure feel without looking mechanically consistent. Letterforms are compact and slightly condensed, with generous bowls and simple, open counters that keep words readable at medium display sizes. The lowercase shows a loose cursive influence with intermittent connections and looped strokes, while the uppercase is more standalone and sign-like, mixing smooth arches with a few sharper joins.
It works best in short to medium-length display settings where personality matters: brand wordmarks, packaging callouts, café/retail signage, posters, greeting cards, and social media graphics. The bold, brushy strokes also make it suitable for stickers, product labels, and other applications that benefit from strong presence at a distance.
Overall, it communicates an approachable, upbeat tone—like casual hand-lettering for notes, labels, and friendly headlines. The slightly bouncy shapes and imperfect stroke edges add personality and informality, keeping the voice warm rather than polished or corporate.
The design intention reads as a friendly, contemporary hand-lettered script meant to feel spontaneous and human while remaining clear in common phrases and headline text. It balances casual cursive cues with sturdy, rounded forms to deliver an energetic, approachable voice for modern informal branding.
Distinctive looped forms (notably in letters like g, j, y, and some uppercase shapes) add a whimsical flourish, while the numerals keep the same rounded, handwritten character. Spacing appears relatively even for a script-adjacent design, but the lively stroke behavior and varied joins make it feel authentically drawn rather than strictly calligraphic.